Friday, September 11, 2009

Americans: counting our losses with a super-multiplier

The IVC 9/11 event
Cops

At noon today, Irvine Valley College held a fine 9/11 Commemoration Ceremony in its Performing Arts Center. Lots of local VIPs were on hand, and a few of them spoke before the audience of 80 or so.

Despite the massive dollop of PR horseshit inevitably baked into this kind of event, it was a good thing, I think. Everybody behaved (although there was the inevitable invocation), and the speakers were pretty good—although I don't understand why our 9/11 events always emphasize cops.

Hutchins

After Board President Don Wagner’s brief address, Irvine Police Chief David L. Maggard, Jr., spoke, followed by new OCFA Fire Chief Keith Richter, and Orange County Sheriff-Coroner Sandra Hutchens, who, like Maggard, attended last year’s IVC ceremony.

IVC’s Matthew Tresler, accompanied by piano, sang “America the Beautiful” and “God Bless America.” Pretty impressive.

All of the speakers were good, albeit subdued, as befitted the occasion.

Yes, they were good. In fact, as they spoke, I was struck by the oddness that people hired presumably to run large and complex and trouble-prone organizations happened also to be photogenic and decent-to-good public speakers.

Maggard may be a nice guy, but he looks and sounds like he’s the star of a TV show about a former FBI man who now heads the Agrestic PD. --That is, to me, when he shows up, he's ready-for-prime-time, and he offers a performance. I’d much rather he got real—maybe talked about how people aren’t always good and you’ve got to struggle to get 'em to straighten up and fly right. (The Irvine PD has a, um, colorful history, you know.)

Richter

As usual, Hutchens was intelligent, but she also seems too nice to kick ass, and surely, given her job, she’s got to do lots of ass-kicking. She did fire a bunch of people recently, so maybe.

But I wanna see a woman who conveys how tough and even nasty her job often is, dealing with all those cops, some of whom are serious assholes (I assume you read the paper).

Richter seemed genuine and smart. It’s easy to imagine him actually being good at his job. Hope so.

Maybe some of you think these observations are inappropriate. After all, this is a special day, commemorating a UNIQUE catastrophe in history. This is no time for peevishness and nickpickery.

Really? Obviously, 9/11 was a terrible day. 3000 or so people were killed on our soil (by “fanatics,” according to one of today’s speaker). Everybody seems to think that that day 8 years ago “changed the world” (as one speaker today put it). Everybody seems to view it as an evil of outstanding enormity.

Trustee Tom Fuentes

Yeah. But we Americans have killed many more than that number of civilians in the Middle East since 2003—in an invasion and occupation instigated by leaders that we had every reason to think might cook the books. And, as it turns out, they did.

I just watched a show on the Military Channel. In Tokyo during WWII, Curtis LeMay’s B-29 crews killed between 80,000 and 200,000 people, mostly civilians, in one night. Burned ‘em alive.

Obviously, I could go on: Dresden, Vietnam, Iraq sanctions, etc.


I don't get it. We're a nation that kills hundreds of thousands of foreigners and we pretty much refuse to think about that as any kind of moral burden. "How many died in the Vietnam War?" I ask my students. The smart ones say, "58,000."

But what about the 1-2 million Vietnamese? What, they don't count?

OK, in 2001, we lost 2 or 3 thousand in one day. That's a terrible thing. But, unless we get to count our losses with a super-multiplier, that toll just doesn't rate compared to the horrors that occur routinely in this world, including horrors we have ourselves perpetrated (or, anyway, that we have brought about).

Please tell me where I've gone wrong in my thinking here.

As you know, some SOCCCD trustees seem to think that we, as a community, have gotta keep touching base with God (an entity who they take to be distinctly Christian, evidently). Well, OK. But it seems to me that, when we send him messages, we'd better be careful. For if there is a God, He’s gotta think that we Americans, especially we comfortable and staunch OC Americans, are some seriously thoughtless assholes.

Next time, I want somebody to talk about that.

Trustee Don Wagner
Reporter Lesley Stahl (asking about U.S. sanctions against Iraq): We have heard that a half million children have died. I mean, that's more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright: I think this is a very hard choice, but the price—we think the price is worth it.

Sorry about that

Just keeping the world safe for democracy, I guess
PM's apology to codebreaker Alan Turing: we were inhumane (Guardian)
[Britain's Prime Minister] Gordon Brown issued an unequivocal apology last night on behalf of the government to Alan Turing, the second world war codebreaker who took his own life 55 years ago after being sentenced to chemical castration for being gay.

Turing is most famous for his work in helping create the "bombe" that cracked messages enciphered with the German Enigma machines. He was convicted of gross indecency in 1952 after admitting a sexual relationship with a man.

He was given experimental chemical castration as a "treatment". His criminal record meant he was unable to continue his work for the UK Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) because his security privileges were withdrawn. Two years later he killed himself, aged 41….
Among those who had signed a petition for an official apology are novelist Ian McEwan and scientist Richard Dawkins.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...